3 essential qualities to help you buy share market winners

Should the likes of Fisher & Paykel Healthcare Corp Ltd (ASX:FPH) and Sydney Airport Holdings Pty Ltd (ASX:SYD) be on my watch list?

| More on:

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

a woman

Different investors will have different styles and place a different emphasis on qualitative or quantitative factors when making investment decisions.

For example the last decade has seen the rise of quantitative trading funds such as Applied Quantitative Research (AQR) that now has US$226 billion under management, some of which is sourced from Australian institutional investors.

Set up by a few former Goldman Sachs traders it applies almost nothing but quantitative analysis (algorithms and computer power) to trade shares and other asset classes in its investment funds.

While most share market investors will focus more on the qualitative factors of a business such as management, brand, and competitive strength – alongside factors that fall under the traditional quantitative umbrella such as yield or valuation.

Some 'day traders' will even try to just use charts to base trades on using price momentum or "the tape" (a historical concept that uses price direction and assumptions over supply and demand) as an indicator of likely movements.

This may provide guidance over the very short term (an hour or a day), but as charts are backward looking they cannot show anything about the medium term direction of forward-looking markets or share prices that move on future events.

By definition a chart reader or technical trader must look backwards to come to their trading conclusions (unless they're guessing like a lot do) and as such they cannot have any insight into the direction of a stock over a longer period as the "trader" has no data to look at.

As such I'd give chart reading a miss unless you're highly experienced, lucky, or a big enough player to absorb trading costs.

I'd look to these three factors in order of priority when coming to an investment decision.

  • Business quality. Is this a high-quality business with a brilliant product, attractive economics, growing profits, an outstanding track record, brilliant founder, or at least some of the above? If not the business is probably not worth your hard earned cash and not investment grade. So look elsewhere.
  • Management. Is the business founder led? Or if not, is it run by a management team focused on medium term shareholder returns with a good track record? A lot of businesses on the share market are run by management teams keener on enriching themselves than shareholders. This is not a big surprise as it's human nature, but if a business is not founder led you need to be sure it's being run on behalf of shareholders.
  • Valuation – some investors will describe themselves as 'growth' or 'value investors' but really growth and value are indivisible in terms of total returns and investing. A growth stock growing quickly will probably offer superior returns to a value stock with falling profits. Valuation is important, but don't fall into the trap of looking for value stocks before the imperatives of business quality and management.

Investing is not rocket science, although many investors will feel it's too complex (risky) to do themselves, or over complicate it in thinking it's akin to rocket science.

If you just focus on the above three factors I expect you will beat the market's returns that are commonly held back by perennial under-performers that you will probably exclude if you just avoid businesses with poor track records.

A racehorse that hasn't won a race its entire career may look attractive odds to the untrained observer, but you're more likely to make money backing the proven winners.

Some stocks on the local market I don't currently own, but with impressive track records include the likes of Carsales.Com Ltd (ASX: CAR), Fisher & Paykel Healthcare Corp Ltd (ASX: FPH) or Sydney Airport Holdings Pty Ltd (ASX: SYD).

Motley Fool contributor Tom Richardson has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. You can find Tom on Twitter @tommyr345 The Motley Fool Australia owns shares of and has recommended Sydney Airport Holdings Limited. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended carsales.com Limited. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on How to invest

A happy couple looking at an iPad feeling great as they watch the Challenger share price rise
How to invest

How to make $50,000 of retirement income with ASX shares

This could be the way to retire with a healthy pay check each year.

Read more »

Happy man holding Australian dollar notes, representing dividends.
Dividend Investing

How to generate $20k of passive income from BHP shares

BHP could provide investors with a big pay check in 2023.

Read more »

A woman looks quizzical as she looks at a graph of the share market.
How to invest

How can I hope to retire rich when the share market is falling?

Dividends can save your retirement if you treat them right.

Read more »

A man walks up three brick pillars to a dollar sign.
How to invest

I'd aim for $1 million, thanks to just a few ASX shares

Here's how I'd go about it.

Read more »

A couple are happy sitting on their yacht.
How to invest

How I would invest in ASX shares to retire rich

I think the share market is the place to be if you want to retire rich.

Read more »

School boy wearing glasses standing in front of chalk board with maths and share price calculations on it
Investing Strategies

Which valuation metrics matter most when picking ASX shares?

There are many ways to measure a company's worth. So how do you choose the best ones when determining which…

Read more »

A formally dressed young woman sips tea from a china cup and saucer as she gives a haughty look against the background of a European style drawing room with heavy wood, traditional wallpaper and a large chandelier hanging from the ceiling.
How to invest

How to become a millionaire with ASX shares

Forget the lottery and take your wealth into your own hands by investing.

Read more »

Young investor watching share chart in anticipation
Cheap Shares

How to spot an ASX share price bargain

Here are three ways you can tell if a share is in the bargain bin.

Read more »